`RestHandler`s are highly tied to actions so registering them in the
same place makes sense.
Removes the need to for plugins to check if they are in transport client
mode before registering a RestHandler - `getRestHandlers` isn't called
at all in transport client mode.
This caused guice to throw a massive fit about the circular dependency
between NodeClient and the allocation deciders. I broke the circular
dependency by registering the actions map with the node client after
instantiation.
In 2f638b5a23, support for fractional time
values was removed. While this change is documented, the error message
presented does not give an indication that fractional inputs are not
supported. This commit fixes this by detecting when the input is a time
value that would successfully parse as a double but will not parse as a
long and presenting a clear error message that fractional time values
are not supported.
Relates #19158
When doing a `date_histogram` aggregation with `"format":"epoch_millis"` or
`"format" : "epoch_second"` and using a time zone other than UTC, the
`key_as_string` ouput in the response does not reflect the UTC timestamp that is
used as the key. This happens because when applying the `time_zone` in
DocValueFormat.DateTime to an epoch-based formatter, this adds the time zone
offset to the value being formated. Instead we should adjust the added display
offset to get back the utc instance in EpochTimePrinter.
Closes#19038
As some plugins are becoming big now, it is hard for the user to know, if the plugin
is being downloaded or just nothing happens.
This commit adds a progress bar during download, which can be disabled by using the `-q`
parameter.
In addition this updates to jimfs 1.1, which allows us to test the batch mode, as adding
security policies are now supported due to having jimfs:// protocol support in URL stream
handlers.
We have a ton of tests for PagedBytesReference but not really many for the other
implementation of BytesReference. This change factors out a basic AbstractBytesReferenceTestCase
that simplifies testing other implementations. It also caught a couple of bug here and there like
a missing mask when reading bytes as ints in PagedBytesReference.
The ChannelBuffer interface today leaks into the BytesReference abstraction
which causes a hard dependency on Netty across the board. This chance moves
this dependency and all BytesReference -> ChannelBuffer conversion into
NettyUtlis and removes the abstraction leak on BytesReference.
This change also removes unused methods on the BytesReference interface
and simplifies access to internal pages.
This change allows Plugin implementions to implement Closeable when they
have resources that should be released. As a first example of how this
can be used, I switched over ingest plugins, which just had the geoip
processor. The ingest framework had chains of closeable to support this,
which is now removed.
Stored scripts are pulled from the cluster state, and the current api
requires passing the ClusterState on each call to compile. However, this
means every user of the ScriptService needs to depend on the
ClusterService. Instead, this change makes the ScriptService a
ClusterStateListener. It also simplifies tests a lot, as they no longer
need to create fake cluster states (except when testing stored scripts).
Today we have several deprecated methods, leaking netty interfaces, support for
multiple compressors on the compressor interface. The netty interface can simply
be replaced by BytesReference which we already have an implementation for, all the
others are not used and are removed in this commit.
The plan for persistent node ids ( #17811 ) is to tie the node identity to a file stored in it's data folders. As such it becomes important that nodes in our testing infra have better affinity with their data folders and that their data folders are not cleaned underneath them. The first is important because we fix the random seed used for node id generation (for reproducibility) and allowing the same node to use two different data folders causes two separate nodes to have the same id, which prevents the cluster from forming. The second is important, for example, where a full cluster restart / single node restart need to maintain node identity and wiping the data folders at the wrong moment prevents this.
Concretely this commit does the following:
1) Remove previous attempts to have data folder per role using a prefix. This wasn't effective as it was using the data paths settings which are only used for part of the runs. An attempt to completely separate the paths via the home dir failed due to assumptions made by index custom path about node data folder ordinal uniqueness (see #19076)
2) Change full cluster restarts to start up nodes in the same order their were first created in, only randomly swapping nodes with the same roles.
3) Change test cluster reset methods to first shutdown the unneeded nodes and then re-start the shared nodes that were shut down, so they'll reclaim their data folders.
4) Improve data folder wiping logic and make sure it wipes only folders of "offline" nodes.
5) Add some very basic tests
Thanks to https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/19088 the settings are now validated against dynamic updaters on the master.
Though only the new settings are applied to the IndexService created for the validation.
Because of this we cannot check the transition from one value to another in a dynamic updaters.
This change creates the IndexService from the current settings and validates that the new dynamic settings
can replace the current settings.
This change also removes the validation of dynamic settings when an index is opened.
The validation should have occurred when the settings have been updated.
Instead of implementing onModule(ActionModule) to register actions,
this has plugins implement ActionPlugin to declare actions. This is
yet another step in cleaning up the plugin infrastructure.
While I was in there I switched AutoCreateIndex and DestructiveOperations
to be eagerly constructed which makes them easier to use when
de-guice-ing the code base.
This commit modifies TimeValue parsing to keep the input time unit. This
enables round-trip parsing from instances of String to instances of
TimeValue and vice-versa. With this, this commit removes support for the
unit "w" representing weeks, and also removes support for fractional
values of units (e.g., 0.5s).
Relates #19102
Today all settings are only validated against their validators
that are available when settings are registered. Yet, some settings updaters
have validators that are dynamic ie. their validation depends on other variables
that are only available at runtime. We do not run those validators when settings
are updated causing index updates to fail on the data nodes instead of on the master.
Relates to #19046
Previous to this change the unresolved extended bounds was passed into the histogram aggregator which meant extendedbounds.min and extendedbounds.max was passed through as null. This had two effects on the histogram aggregator:
1. If the histogram aggregator was unmapped across all shards, the reduce phase would not add buckets for the extended bounds and the response would contain zero buckets
2. If the histogram aggregator was not unmapped in some shards, the reduce phase might sometimes chose to reduce based on the unmapped shard response and therefore the extended bounds would be ignored.
This change resolves the extended bounds in the unmapped case and solves the above two issues.
Closes#19009
#18938 has changed the timing in which we send out to nodes to fetch their shard stores. Instead of doing this after the cluster state resulting of the node's join was published, #18938 made it be sent concurrently to the publishing processes. This revealed a couple of points where the shard store fetching is dependent of the current state of affairs of the cluster state, both on the master and the data nodes. The problem discovered were already present without #18938 but required a failure/extreme situations to make them happen.This PR tries to remove as much as possible of these dependencies making shard store fetching simpler and make the way to re-introduce #18938 which was reverted.
These are the notable changes:
1) Allow TransportNodesAction (of which shard store fetching is derived) callers to supply concrete disco nodes, so it won't need the cluster state to resolve them. This was a problem because the cluster state containing the needed nodes was not yet made available through ClusterService. Note that long term we can expect the rest layer to resolve node ids to concrete nodes, making this mode the only one needed.
2) The data node relied on the cluster state to have the relevant index meta data so it can find data when custom paths are used. We now fall back to read the meta data from disk if needed.
3) The data node was relying on it's own IndexService state to indicate whether the data it has corresponds to an existing allocation. This is of course something it can not know until it got (and processed) the new cluster state from the master. This flag in the response is now removed. This is not a problem because we used that flag to protect against double assigning of a shard to the same node, but we are already protected from it by the allocation deciders.
4) I removed the redundant filterNodeIds method in TransportNodesAction - if people want to filter they can override resolveRequest.
This commit fixes several NPEs caused by implicitly performing a get request for a document that exists with its _source disabled and then trying to access the source. Instead of causing an NPE the following queries will throw an exception with a "source disabled" message (similar behavior as if the document does not exist).:
- GeoShape query for pre-indexed shape (throws IllegalArgumentException)
- Percolate query for an existing document (throws IllegalArgumentException)
A Terms query with a lookup will ignore the document if the source does not exist (same as if the document does not exist).
GET and HEAD requests for the document _source will return a 404 if the source is disabled (even if the document exists).
Instead of plugins calling `registerTokenizer` to extend the analyzer
they now instead have to implement `AnalysisPlugin` and override
`getTokenizer`. This lines up extending plugins in with extending
scripts. This allows `AnalysisModule` to construct the `AnalysisRegistry`
immediately as part of its constructor which makes testing anslysis
much simpler.
This also moves the default analysis configuration into `AnalysisModule`
which is how search is setup.
Like `ScriptModule`, `AnalysisModule` no longer extends `AbstractModule`.
Instead it is only responsible for building `AnslysisRegistry`. We still
bind `AnalysisRegistry` but we only do so in `Node`. This is means it
is available at module construction time so we slowly remove the need to
bind it in guice.
Today when parsing the timeout field in a query body, if time units are
supplied the parser throws a NumberFormatException. Addtionally, the
parsing allows the timeout field to not specify units (it assumes
milliseconds). This commit fixes this behavior by not only allowing time
units to be specified but requires time units to be specified. This is
consistent with the documented behavior and the behavior in 2.x.
Relates #19077
This commit fixes several NPEs caused by implicitly performing a get request for a document that exists with its _source disabled and then trying to access the source. Instead of causing an NPE the following queries will throw an exception with a "source disabled" message (similar behavior as if the document does not exist).:
- GeoShape query for pre-indexed shape (throws IllegalArgumentException)
- Percolate query for an existing document (throws IllegalArgumentException)
A Terms query with a lookup will ignore the document if the source does not exist (same as if the document does not exist).
GET and HEAD requests for the document _source will return a 404 if the source is disabled (even if the document exists).
If we don't care about scoring then for certain candidate matches we can be certain, that if they are a candidate match,
then they will always match. So verifying these queries with the MemoryIndex can be skipped.
Currently we don't throw an error when there is more than one query clause
specified in a must/must_not/should/filter object of the bool query without
using array notation, e.g.:
{ "bool" : { "must" : { "match" : { ... }, "match": { ... }}}}
In these cases, only the first query will be parsed and further behaviour is
unspecified, possibly leading to silently ignoring the rest of the query.
Instead we should throw a ParsingException if we don't encounter an END_OBJECT
token after having parsed the query clause.
Global cluster blocks were not checked if an empty set of indices were passed as argument to the block checking method. This would lead to issues where some operations are already executed on a cluster before it has recovered its cluster state.
This commit upgrades JNA from version 4.1.0 to 4.2.2. Additionally, this
dependency is now non-optional as JNA is dual-licensed with Apache
License 2.0 since JNA 4.0.0.
Relates #19045
This is the same as what Lucene does for its analysis factories, and we hawe
tests that make sure that the elasticsearch factories are in sync with
Lucene's. This is a first step to move forward on #9978 and #18064.
I suspect recent failures are due to the fact that the cache disables itself
when there is contention. This runs assertions in an assertBusy block since
they should eventually succeed.
This commit moves template support out of the Search API to its own dedicated Search Template API in the lang-mustache module. It provides a new SearchTemplateAction that can be used to render templates before it gets delegated to the usual Search API. The current REST endpoint are identical, but the Render Search Template endpoint now uses the same Search Template API with a new "simulate" option. When this option is enabled, the Search Template API only renders template and returns immediatly, without executing the search.
Closes#17906
There are secondary issues with async shard fetch going out to nodes before they have a cluster state published to them that need to be solved first. For example:
- async fetch uses transport node action that resolves nodes based on the cluster state (but it's not yet exposed by ClusterService since we inline the reroute)
- after disruption nodes will respond with an allocated shard (they didn't clean up their shards yet) which throws of decisions master side.
- nodes deed the index meta data in question but they may not have if they didn't recieve the latest CS
If a plugin declares `onModule(SomethingThatIsntAModule)` then refuse
to start. Before this commit we just logged a warning that flies by in
the console and is easy to miss. You can't miss refusing to start!